In re FAINT.
Calendar No. 46,223.Supreme Court of Michigan.
Writ dismissed November 29, 1954.Philip Weissman, for petitioner.
Frank G. Millard, Attorney General, Gerald K. O'Brien, Prosecuting Attorney, Samuel Brezner and Angelo A. Pentolino, Assistant Prosecuting Attorneys, for the people.
DETHMERS, J.
This is habeas corpus and ancillary certiorari to inquire into the legality of the detention of plaintiff, committed on May 8, 1950, under PA 1939, No 165 and its amendments then in effect (CL 1948, § 780.501 et seq. [Stat Ann 1949 Cum Supp *410 § 28.967(1) et seq.]) as a criminal sexual psychopathic person.
Plaintiff says that the prosecuting attorney's statement in writing, filed as commencement of proceedings under the statute, was fatally defective because it had not been made under oath and failed to set forth facts tending to show that plaintiff was a criminal sexual psychopathic person. CL 1948, § 780.503 (Stat Ann 1949 Cum Supp § 28.967[3]), providing for the filing of such "statement in writing," did not then, and does not now, require that it be made under oath. The statement alleged 7 convictions of indecent exposure and 1 of gross indecency against plaintiff. That sufficed. In re Pryor, 335 Mich. 212.
Plaintiff challenges the sufficiency of the report filed by the examining psychiatrists for failure to state the facts upon which their alleged conclusions concerning plaintiff were based. Plaintiff says that the statute requires this, quoting in support from CLS 1952, § 780.504 (Stat Ann 1953 Cum Supp § 28.967[4]), but without pointing out that the requirement in that respect came into the statute through its amendment by PA 1950 (Ex Sess), No 25, effective June 9, 1950. The prosecuting attorney, denying that the statute so requires, quotes the statute as found in CL 1948 prior to the amendment, without calling attention to the fact that plaintiff's reliance is on the subsequent amendment. The report of the psychiatrists in this case was made on April 7, 1950, and on May 8, 1950, plaintiff was adjudged to be a criminal sexual psychopathic person and ordered committed as such, all in advance of the effective date of the amendment. The report met the statutory requirements in effect at the time it was made and filed. Neither People v. Artinian, 320 Mich. 441, nor In re Fidrych, 331 Mich. 485, cited by plaintiff, is controlling here. Decision in Artinian *411 was not predicated on an express statutory requirement as to what the report should contain but on the failure of either the doctors' report or their testimony to afford a factual basis for a judicial determination, so that their judgment had been substituted for that of the court. Fidrych involved the statute (CL 1948, § 330.20 [Stat Ann 1947 Cum Supp § 14.810]) relating to cases of insanity, feeble-mindedness or epilepsy, which required, similar to the mentioned amendment effective June 9, 1950, relating to criminal sexual psychopathic persons, that the physicians' certificate should contain the facts and circumstances upon which their opinions were based.
Plaintiff's claim that the proofs at the hearing were insufficient is not a proper one for consideration in habeas corpus proceedings; nor is he correct in his position that the proofs must be assumed to have been insufficient unless the return to the writ of certiorari contains a transcript or record of such proofs showing them to have been sufficient. The people are not required to furnish such transcript to him at public expense as he apparently contends.
The record is insufficient to present a justiciable question concerning the legality of his transfer by the department of mental health from the Ionia State hospital to the State prison of southern Michigan, to be determined on the basis of the treatment afforded him in the latter institution. Authority for his detention there is found in CL 1948, § 780.505 (Stat Ann 1949 Cum Supp § 28.967[5]).
Writ dismissed.
BUTZEL, C.J., and CARR, BUSHNELL, SHARPE, BOYLES, REID, and KELLY, JJ., concurred.